Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0020437 (
hypercalcemia
)
10,293
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Near-term rat fetuses in utero are acidotic and hypoxic, and have high levels of total serum calcium. In the first hour of postnatal life, pO2 and pH increase and pCO2 and calcium fall. Between 1 and 4 h following birth, respiratory gases vary little, whereas pH continues to rise and calcium further declines. By 4 h, newborns reach normal pH levels but are markedly hypocalcemic. It is suggested that the '
hypercalcemia
' of intrauterine life is related to acidosis in utero, and that following birth, the initial fall in serum calcium is associated with the blowing off of CO2 and a concomitant rise in pH. The later decline in circulating calcium is independent of alterations in respiratory gases and relates directly to the final correction of neonatal acidosis.
...
PMID:pH and the level of calcium in the blood of fetal and neonatal albino rats. 0 63
Fifteen patients with the diagnosis of multiple endocrine adenomatosis, type II, syndrome (MEA II) were reported from a single center to discuss the dilemmas of early detection and treatment of the adrenal medullary, thyroid, and parathyroid gland diseases. Ten patients came from three families. Three of the patients died, none in hypertensive crisis. Bilateral adrenal medullary disease was present in six patients. Five patients with proved pheochromocytoma had hypertension. All had diagnostic urinary catecholamine values. Nine normotensive patients without proved pheochromocytoma but in a high-risk category for adrenal medullary disease, have multiple suspicious urinary cathecholamines suggestive of adrenal medullary hyperplasia. Bilateral adrenalectomy is recommended for proved adrenal medullary disease in the MEA II syndrome. Medullary carcinoma of the thyroid gland was found in 13 patients and is believed to be present in two others. Five of the proved cases were occult, being discovered by elevation of pentagastrin-stimulated serum calcitonin levels, justifying total thyroidectomy. Parathyroid hyperplasia was found in three patients with preoperative
hypercalcemia
and in four others with preoperative normocalcemia. Conservative treatment of parathyroid gland hyperplasia in the MEA II syndrome is substantiated. Metachronous phenotypic expression of the syndrome components was significant.
...
PMID:Dilemmas in the early diagnosis and treatment of multiple endocrine adenomatosis, type II. 1 7
The gastric acid output was studied in the 11 patients of hyperparathyroidism before and after parathyroidectomy. The gastric acid output before operation was almost equal to the normal control in our hospital. After the correction of serum calcium by parathyroidectomy, the gastric acid output and serum gastrin were decreased. The decreased gastric acid output was recovered as the days passed since operation and approached to the preoperative level. The acid output in hyperparathyroidism was less in the case whose activity of alkaline phosphatase was more, which suggested that the calcium deposition on gastric mucosa might damage the parietal cell as the result of long lasting
hypercalcemia
.
...
PMID:The further investigation on the gastric acid secretion in the primary hyperparathyroidism. 2 34
A patient initially showed symptoms of peptic ulcer disease in 1953 and was later found to have
hypercalcemia
and hyperparathyroidism. Peptic ulcer symptoms persisted after parathyroidectomy, and results of studies provided evidence of the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. Evaluation of the patient's family showed a classic pattern of multiple endocrine adenomatosis type 1. The patient underwent total gastrectomy and excision of a gastrin cell adenoma in 1971 with relief of symptoms, but with persistent hypergastrinemia. He remained in good health until January 1976, when symptoms of hypoglycemia developed. Results of laboratory studies were compatible with the diagnosis of a pancreatic beta-cell adenoma. At the time of operation, an adenoma of the head of the pancreas was found. The tumor was excised; no other metastatic tumors were found. The tumor was compatible with a beta-cell adenoma and was found to contain high concentrations of insulin; there was no important amount of gastrin. Symptoms of hypoglycemia have entirely disappeared.
...
PMID:Separate pancreatic gastrin cell and beta-cell adenomas: report of a patient with multiple endocrine adenomatosis type 1. 3 17
Light microscopic examination of kidney tissue of guinea pigs exposed to 1.5% CO2, 21% O2, and balance N2 for periods as long as 42 days and of rats exposed to the same CO2 concentrations for up to 91 days showed that the incidence of focal kidney calcification increased with length of exposure. Calcification occurred primarily in the tubules of the renal cortex. Another group of guinea pigs were exposed to 1% CO2, 21% O2, and the balance N2 for periods up to six weeks and were later killed at regular intervals, together with control animals of the same litter. In the exposed animals, arterial PCO2 was elevated by 3-4 mmHg and hydrogen ions by about 4 nmol/liter. The standard bicarbonate level was lowered by 1-1.5 mmol, indicating a lack of renal reabsorption of bicarbonate (HCO3), which in turn placed greater stress on the bone buffer system and apparently caused bone calcium and phosphorus mobilization. Bone calcium and phosphorus levels exhibited a cyclic decrease, which resulted in cyclic
hypercalcemia
and hyperphosphatemia, after one week and six weeks of exposure to 1% CO2. Kidney calcium content increased significantly after two weeks of exposure (27%) and remained at this elevated level during subsequent exposures between the third and sixth weeks. These findings indicate that once the kidney calcification process has started, kidney mineralization is independent of fluctuations in the blood calcium level. A rise in plasma phosphate level that occurred after one day of exposure could have been a precipitating factor in the calcification process. The small but consistent increases in ionized calcium during a 4-week exposure to 1% CO2 may have stimulated the parathyroid, causing an increased blood calcium level that was independent of the two calcium tides in the blood associated with marked bone calcium loss.
...
PMID:CO2-induced kidney calcification. 4 51
The effects of calcium-gluconate infusions on renal function were studied in unanesthetised dogs. Each dog was studied during hydropenia and saline infusion.
Hypercalcemia
, mean serum calcium 3.85 mmol/l (hydropenia) and 3.62 mmol/l (saline infusion), increased fractional excretion of sodium (CNa/CIn), calcium (CCa/CIn), and magnesium (CMg/CIn). The increase was significantly higher in saline-expanded dogs than in hydropenic dogs. Fractional excretion of potassium (CK/CIn) was increased in hydropenia but remained unchanged in saline-expanded animals. Fractional excretion of phosphate (Cp/CIn) was not consistently changed by
hypercalcemia
. Fractional excretion of chloride (CCl/CIn) was markedly increased in saline-expanded dogs but was not changed in hydropenia. Urine osmolality was reduced in hydropenic dogs but unchanged in saline-expanded dogs. In hydropenic as well as in saline-expanded dogs tubular reabsorption of solute-free water (TcH2O/CIn) increased during the first hour of
hypercalcemia
. In hydropenic dogs
hypercalcemia
caused a slight but significant decrease in blood pH, standard bicarbonate, and base excess. In hydropenic as well as in saline-expanded dogs glomerular filtration rate (CIn), renal plasma flow (CPAH), and filtration fraction were unaffected.
...
PMID:Renal function in hypercalcemic dogs during hydropenia and during saline infusion. 4 8
Diagnosis of myeloma depends on identification of malignant plasma cells and the product of these cells, a monoclonal immunoprotein. Of the clinical manifestations of plasma cell myeloma, skeletal pain and anemia are two of the more common. Unexplained anemia and osteoporosis noted in the elderly should suggest the possibility of myeloma; this combination of symptoms certainly warrants obtaining a protein electrophoresis.
Hypercalcemia
and renal insufficiency are frequent sequelae of myeloma.
...
PMID:Diagnosis of plasma cell myeloma. 4 74
The treatment of rapidly progressive skeletal demineralisation in myelomatosis has been studied with the help of metabolic calcium balance in two patients; In one, osteoporosis accelerated during treatment with melphalan and prednisolone, although he remained normocalcaemic throughout, suggesting that osteoporosis was aggravated by corticosteroid therapy. In the other patient, who was initially hypercalcaemic, conventional treatment produced clinical remission before eventual relapse with more
hypercalcaemia
and skeletal dissolution. Both patients were then treated with mithramycin alone, and, although neither obtained haematological remission, bone pain was relieved, hypercalciuria and
hypercalcaemia
were abolished, and calcium balances proved that mithramycin was effective in restoring calcium equilibrium. The results indicate that mithramycin may abolish excessive bone resorption in myelomatosis and that severe bone dissolution may occur in the absence of
hypercalcaemia
. Regular determination of 24-hour urinary calcium excretion as well as of plasma-calcium is important in monitoring process. Mithramycin should be considered in the early treatment not only of
hypercalcaemia
but also of severe hypercalciuria, if these complications do not rapidly remit during the first course of conventional myeloma therapy, with or without steroids. Finally, these results add to evidence that a humoral factor may be responsible for osteoclast stimulation in myelomatosis.
...
PMID:Treatment of osteolytic myelomatosis with mithramycin. 4 84
Two patients are described in whom the preliminary clinical and laboratory investigations suggested a diagnosis of osteomalacia, from gluten-sensitive enteropathy in one and from anticonvulsant therapy in the other. However, when the primary disease was corrected by diet and extra vitamin D, respectively, both patients developed
hypercalcaemia
. A standard hydrocortisone test in the second patient failed to reduce the
hypercalcaemia
. In both patients parathyroid tumours were found at operation. It is suggested that both patients had tertiary hyperparathyroidism in which the normally tell-tale
hypercalcaemia
was at first masked by the other abnormalities, and that this masking may account for some cases reported as having normocalcaemic primary (or tertiary) hyperpatathyroidism. Interpretation of total plasma-calcium is likely to be unreliable unless the 25-hydroxyvitamin-D levels can be shown or assumed to be normal.
...
PMID:Masked primary (or tertiary) hyperparathyroidism. 4 76
A localized, transplantable testicular tumor of the Fischer rat regularly produces
hypercalcemia
and increased phosphorus clearance in host animals. Light and electron microscopic examinations of the tumor indicate that it is of Leydig origin. There is no evidence that the tumor secretes any biologically active sex steroids, judges by weights of target tissues, when the tumor is grown in castrated or spayed rats. No radioactive steroid hormone formation in vitro was detected using 1-14C-acetate as a precursor although 14C was incorporated into the "C27" sterol fraction. Mass (micrograms) amounts of sex steroids were not detected after purifying large amounts of tumor extracts. The phytosterols, beta-sitosterol, stigmasterol, campesterol, were tentatively identified in tumor extracts but were also found in other tissues and in tumors not associated with
hypercalcemia
. Administered in vivo, human chorionic gonadotropin caused an acute rise in serum calcium in 3 to 5 hours in tumor-bearing hypercalcemic rats. Only trophic hormones with luteinizing hormone activity were found to compete with 125I-human chorionic gonadotropin for binding to the tumor homogenate in vitro indicating the tumor possessed luteinizing hormone receptors. When the tumor was transplanted intrasplenically,
hypercalcemia
did not occur unless adhesions formed, suggesting that the tumor hormone was rapidly metabolized by the liver and was probably of small molecular weight. Secretory granules, usually thought to be associated with peptide hormone secretion, were not detected at the ultrastructure level. Cortisol, conjugated estrogen, and an inhibitor of sterol biosynthesis (AY-9944) were effective in lowering the elevated serum calcium. Definitive identification of the agent causing lethal
hypercalcemia
has not been accomplished. The available data suggest it is not parathyroid hormone or vitamin D. The Leydig cell origin of the tumor, its response to human chorionic gonadotropin in vivo, the lack of secretory granules at the ultrastructural level, and biologic characteristics, all lead to the speculation that the secretory product of the tumor is a new hormonal substance, possibly a steroid precursor or related substance not previously described or is a known substance of small molecular weight whose calcium-mobilizing properties have not been fully characterized. This transplantable tumor may represent a model for one form of neoplastic
hypercalcemia
occurring in man and may have important implications in the general area of calcium and phosphorus homeostasis.
...
PMID:Hypercalcemia and neoplasia. Biologic, biochemical, and ultrastructural studies of a hypercalcemia-producing Leydig cell tumor of the rat. 5 57
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>